Zigner
Senior Member, Non-Attorney
You're welcome - one is glad to be of service!It's OK, no worry, Zigner, I got the advice I need. Thanks.
You're welcome - one is glad to be of service!It's OK, no worry, Zigner, I got the advice I need. Thanks.
the problem is: he is removing the mail not with intent to obstruct delivery but simply to remove it from his mailbox which the postman has deposited it into. Tossing is after that does not constitute intent, which is actually impossible because he could not have known there was mail in the box with an unknown addressee.§ 1702. Obstruction of correspondence
Whoever takes any letter, postal card, or package out of any post office or any authorized depository for mail matter, or from any letter or mail carrier, or which has been in any post office or authorized depository, or in the custody of any letter or mail carrier, before it has been delivered to the person to whom it was directed, with design to obstruct the correspondence, or to pry into the business or secrets of another, or opens, secretes, embezzles, or destroys the same, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
but that does not place a duty upon the new resident to give a damn about incorrectly delivered mail.=mamamia2;2696135]I don't know about you guys, but around here USPS is good only at something like 95% of forwarding mail, even when the "change of address" service is still in force.... This has been true for all 3 cases involving me, namely my mail, the previous owners' mail, and my business moving to a new location only couple months ago.... Not all 100% of mail has been adequately forwarded....
you cannot force a person to show goodwill nor cooperate with what you want of them.....So SOME GOOD WILL AND COOPERATION are in place when people move......
and that has nothing to do with the case at hand...When we moved out the new owner and his friend-tenant have been updated with all the technical issues that helped them adjust easily to the new property, from telling them how to use the tricky garage door opener, to all paper work and manuals that belong to all the appliances in the house....
yet still, it does not create a duty for the current resident to care nor act to benefit you.Also, it's not that difficult to imagine scenarios like an organization with whom I haven't had any contact for 3 years, or an old friend who I last heard from 7 years ago ---- suddenly, out of the blue sending me a letter...... One doesn't have to be condemned as being utterly irresponsible for failing to update the address with a friend with whom the the last contact was 7 years ago....
.you got the answer in the first response. The guy has no duty to do anything with your mail. You kept adding the fluff.Since this specific forum is a LEGAL forum, I didn't think I need to tell the full detailed "story of my life".... I was asking a LEGAL question. I appreciate the responses which were focusing on the LEGALITY of my issue. The rest is fluff
wow!. You call the guy a fool and you still want him to be your secretary.t (he's really a bit of a fool),
It's not the owner's job to take care of your mail years after the forwarding order expired. If it were me, I'd be marking it return to sender. Why on earth should I be burdened with responsibility for your lousy procrastination in giving people your proper address. Even if he tossed it in the trash, I doubt there's any civil or criminal liability. Contact the taxing authority for your payment information and to get them to put a proper address on file.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Illinois
We sold our home couple years ago, and after the Post Office stopped forwarding our mail, the new owner is holding it, or trashing it, or who knows what he's doing with it.... Our NEW property tax bill was sent to the old address, as I just found out (looking on-line), and I need the statement for payment, but the new owner does not respond to my calls, I'm asking him to let me know when he gets mail on my name, I asked him to just leave it between the doors, so I don't have to bother him, but I get no response.... This has been going on for the past 2 years.... Is he doing anything illegal? Isn't it against Federal law to keep, or open, or trash mail that belongs to someone else? Can I threaten him?
Thanks.....
Bad idea. All mail will be forwarded, not just the ones who share your last name. I know it's a bad idea because a relative of ours forwarded "all" to our address and we also got the roommates mail. The current homeowners would be mightily pissed off if they didn't get mail that should have been rightfully delivered to their address.ATip: when requesting mail forwarding, check the box for all family's mail, not the box for individual only. This helps in that the post office will forward anything with the same last name. While the process is mostly automated, there is still some human involved and the error that goes with it.
Bad idea. All mail will be forwarded, not just the ones who share your last name. I know it's a bad idea because a relative of ours forwarded "all" to our address and we also got the roommates mail. The current homeowners would be mightily pissed off if they didn't get mail that should have been rightfully delivered to their address.
The OP has been told what to do several times and continued to come back here complaining about the situation.